Fields Of Fire HEARTBREAk ridge 1

Soldiers of the 9th Infantry Regiment “Manchus” climb Bloody Ridge Background

The started in June 1950. Partitioned after World RCT was thrown into action in support of the 24th Infantry Divi- War II with the North under Soviet sponsorship and the US in the sion as part of the Naktong Campaign (See Fields of Fire: Keep Up South, mixed signals led the North Korean and Soviet leadership to the Fire). believe the US would not contest the attack. The US was woefully By September the tide turned with the Marine landing at Inchon. unprepared, but President Truman decided to stand against the ag- The US and ROK forces broke out of the Pusan perimeter and gression. The Republic of Korea (ROK) forces were no match for dashed north in pursuit of the NKPA. The US and ROK forces the well equipped and trained North Korea People’s Army (NKPA). pursued deep into North Korea and the new Communist Regime The US Army threw elements of the 24th Infantry Division in a in China perceived this as a direct threat and secretly mobilized. vain attempt to stem the tide. By August the remaining ROK and Chinese forces infiltrated into North Korea and launch a series of US forces were forced into a pocket around the southern port of attacks against ROK and 1st Cavalry Division forces in October as Pusan (Busan). US reinforcements began arriving with the 25th In- a warning. The Chinese infiltration was so effective that US forces fantry Division and 1st Cavalry Division from the Far East forces to did not believe the Chinese were attacking in any strength and took prevent a humiliating defeat. These US units were under manned, no precautions. The Chinese launched a massive stroke in No- poorly trained and equipped. vember 1950 that shattered US and ROK forces. The 2nd Infantry The Second Infantry Division Division was badly mauled in the Chongchon and Kunu-ri battles. At Fort Lewis, Washington the 2nd Infantry Division received the After falling back below the 38th Parallel, the 2nd Infantry Division alert at 1000 on 9 July, all leaves, discharges and transfers were parried the Chinese attack at Wonju, counter-attacked and stopped immediately canceled in flurry of telegrams. Some 5000 men were the Chinese at Chipyong-ni in January and February of 1951. rushed in from to fill the ranks. Special training team was flown in The Summer of 1951 had the Division taking part in a series of from Fort Benning to train the Soldiers on the new 3.5 inch rocket offensive operations in Central Korea systematically rolling back launcher. The 9th Infantry stood up the 9th Regimental Combat Chinese and North Korea forces. In the high rugged hills just to the Team (RCT) on 10 July as it was slated to be the first to leave. The south of the 38th Parallel the battle between August and October first ship departed Seattle on 17 July with elements of the 9th RCT. was the last major engagement of the War for the 2nd Infantry Divi- A flotilla of 21 ships departed over the next few days with the entire sion. Division. The first elements arrived on the 31st of July. The 9th 2 Fields Of Fire HEARTBREAk ridge The Campaign

Aug 14 Order to take Bloody Ridge came down from X Corps, to be led by the ROK 36th Regiment. Aug 15 Aug 16 28 CAS Sorties against Bloody Ridge (983, 940 and 773 Complex) Aug 17 36th ROK attacked at 0600, battled estimated 2 NKPA BNs, stopped, then launched a night attack that fought within 50m of 940, 200m of 983 and 773 Aug 18 Aug 19 Aug 20 ROK took 773 at 1800, NKPA counter attack repulsed that night Aug 21 ROK took 983 and 940 they continued attacks again unnumbered hills w/o success Aug 22 Aug 23 Aug 24 Aug 25 Aug 26 0245, determined NKPA counter attack, 2 BNs hit 983 from N, with company sized envelopment, NKPA established on saddle between 940 and 983. By 1200 983 surrounded. By 1500 the remaining ROK on 983 surrender.

9th Infantry given responsibility to retake 983, 38th Infantry to Support ROK on 940 and 773

Aug 27 2/9 attacks unsuccessfully, that night Division Arty fires 22,500 round barrage Aug 28 3/9 passes through 2/9 to continue attack, Heavy Rain delays movement to noon, by 1300 hit heavy resistance. I/3/9 and F/3/9 are lead elements and dig in short of crest. Intermittent heavy rain Aug 29 1/9 released to continue attack Aug 30 1/9 and 2/9 attack 983-940 hill mass, 3/9 sent to reinforcement 773, but was hit enroute and pushed down the hill. Reorga- nized and moved toward 773 but discovered the ROKs and given it up Aug 31 1/9 attacked and took 773 at 2130 led by Co B and C, it would never fall again Sept 1 9th Infantry attacks 983-940 repulsed, heavy air and artillery support Sept 2 9th Infantry attacks 983-940 repulsed, heavy air and artillery support Sept 3 9th Infantry attacks 983-940 repulsed, heavy air and artillery support Sept 4 Hold for Air Attacks and maneuver of 23rd and 38th Infantry regiments to cut off the enemy Sept 5 1/9 and 2/9 attack 983-940 hill mass, and by 1400 both 983 and 940 were secured

Intel reports 4000 NKPA KIA and 7000 WIA in fight for Bloody Ridge

Sept 6 9th rotates out of the line, 23rd and 38th extend gains Sept 7 Sept 8 Sept 9 Sept 10 Sept 11 9th relieves 23rd, which shifted and 38th rotates to reserve Sept 12 Sept 13 Heartbreak Ridge (894, 931, 851 Complex) begins. 1/9 Attack on Hill 728 W of 931 (Main Objective) Artillery/Mortars repel attack Sept 14 1/9 Attack Hill 894 supported by Co B, 72nd Tank Bn from MSR, 2/9 attack 728 by noon SE of 894, by 1700 was 650m S of 894 Sept 15 2/9 0700 Attack towards 894 determined resistance, took crest at 1445, pushed forces N toward 931 by 400m W to Hill 485 and overlooked village of Tutayon Sept 16 NKPA counter-attacks focus on 23rd Infantry sector but 9th is also hit Sept 17 Sept 18 Sept 19 3/9 Attack 485-728 with 37 Air Sorties, Minefields Repelled Sept 20 MGen Robert Young assumes command of 2nd Infantry Division from BGen Thomas DeShazo Fields Of Fire HEARTBREAk ridge 3

Sept 21 Sept 22 Sept 23 1/9 Failed attack on 1024 perimeter defense 300m NE of crest Sept 24 1/9 Failed attack on 728 Sept 25 1/9 Takes 1024, Co A crest at 1145, hvy enemy mortar barrage, full BN by 1500 tied in with ROK at 1900 Sept 26 1/9 Consolidated on 1024, Co A pushed 300m N of 1024 to flush and kill 45 enemy in bunkers on ridge line. 1/9 repulses strong enemy night attack on 1024, 2/9 same on Hill 582 Sept 27 Sept 28 1/9 repulses 13 separate attacks on Hill 1024, 1/9 turns Hill 1024 to 7th ROK Division (128 Air Sorties) Sept 29 Kim Il Sung Ridge (867, 1005, 1040 Complex) starts with 1/9 supported by Co B, 72nd Tank Bn attacks Hill 867 (Fog, mist and rain) Sept 30 Oct 1 Oct 2 Oct 3 Oct 4 Oct 5 H-hour 2100 OpOrd 37 “Operation Touchdown”, Coordinated Attack that breaks enemy hold Oct 6 3/9 Takes Hill 867 with little resistance Oct 7 Oct 8 Oct 9 2/9 takes 1005 Oct 10 1/9 passes through 2/9 on Hill 1005 to 1040 and took it by 1610 Oct 20 2nd Infantry Division pulled off line, relieved by the 7th Infantry Division after 103 of continuous combat

The eight missions in the campaign 8 are pictured on this storyboard

7 6 5 hill 931

4

2

3 1

bloody ridge Fields Of Fire HEARTBREAk ridge 4

The Organization, Equipment and Tactics of the Campaign

The steep, rugged hills defined this campaign. They were originally The US troops had the reliable and powerful M1 Garand, supported covered in pines, but the shelling cleared the trees quickly. Only the by the BAR. The BAR had lost some of its popularity from WWII, folds of the winding ridges, rocks and brush provided cover. The possibly due to more machineguns in the company meant they enemy had entrenched along the ridge and placed many bunkers. were less necessary and the weapons were getting older and less The 9th Infantry was facing North Koreans again after months of reliable. The M2 carbine was widely issued and not popular, unlike fighting Communist Chinese Forces (CCF). The NKPA was all but the M1 carbine of WWII. The M2 was made to be able to fire in destroyed by October of 1950. The Chinese intervention bought full automatic, but the capability was unreliable. The carbine round them time to rebuild. They never returned to the same level as the was also not as powerful against the human wave assaults of the army that surged across the 38th Parallel in June of 1950. The Chi- NKPA and CCF troops. The biggest improvement from WWII was nese and NKPA essentially tag teamed operations. The NKPA did adding the weapons squad to each platoon with two M1919A6 light retain the Soviet weaponry, which was better than the CCF hodge- machineguns. This tripled the machineguns in the rifle company. podge of Japanese, US and Soviet weapons. The addition of bazookas and recoilless rifles gave the US infantry The US forces took a more systematic approach to the campaign. much more firepower than their WWII counterparts. The huge logistics tail of the 2nd Infantry Division made for a The very steep ridges could not be attacked in a traditional broad “commuter” approach to the battle. Units did not remain on the frontage. They had to be taken along the spines. This channelized heights, but rotated frequently to the relative comfort of tents and the attackers along the spines, making for a difficult, close fight. hot chow along the roads. This also placed the Battalion and higher The NKPA sought to hold the ground and inflict punishment on the Headquarters in the valleys and they rarely ventured up to the US and ROK forces. They were aggressive in their counter-attacks, deadly high ground. Most companies were led by 1st as until they had nothing left. US Companies rested and received more experienced officers were had to find. Neither the NKPA, nor replacements throughout the battle, in one high profile incident the CCF fielded any effective anti-tank guns and had few mines, so the replacements were received and a company thrown into action US tanks moved along the valleys at will. NKPA artillery was most in under six hours which was rightfully criticized for increasing infantry mortars and self propelled 76mm field guns. They used the casualties as the replacements had no time to be properly integrated self propelled guns to “shoot and scoot” from caves and revetments into the rifle squads. to protect them from effective US counter fire directed by aircraft. Air and artillery was used extensively by US troops. The Division The NKPA units were committed to the action until casualties made had all its artillery pooled so fires could be rapidly massed across them ineffective and then they rotated. the Division frontage. Hitting the sharp ridge tops is challenging The NKPA squads used the DPM light machinegun, M1891 Mosin- for artillery and the battalion and regimental mortars proved very Nagant bolt action rifle and the most popular PPSh41/43 subma- adept. Air attacks were not closely integrated with the maneuver of chinegun. The PPSh (Pay-Pay-Sha) was now universally by US ground forces that reduced their effectiveness. Against the NKPA troops as the “burp gun.” The Burp gun and stick grenade were the trenches and bunkers, much of the artillery merely served to clear weapons of choice of the NKPA. They were supported by SG43 and the enemy fields of fire. PM M1910 wheeled heavy machineguns.

korean war statistics

2nd Infantry Division M1919A6 Gun Team

Source: Korean Battle Chronology: Unit-by-Unit United States Casualty Figures and Citations by Richard E. Ecker, McFarland & Co, Jefferson, NC, 2005 Primary Source: http://www.2id.org/koreanwar.htm maintained by 2nd Infantry Division Korean War Veterans Association. Second Edition © GMT L.L.C. 2011